Nick Graham’s space odyssey continued for spring with a collection titled “1969.” He called it “one of the most transformational years in our history, a year that had both the first landing on the moon by Apollo 11 and also Woodstock, both of which were pretty transformative events in our culture.”
A rocket-shaped 1959 Cadillac Cyclone concept car — the only one made and dispatched from the company’s archives in Detroit — was parked on the runway and served as the perfect backdrop for the zesty show.
It opened with a troupe of boys dancing in “Martian in Training” T-shirts, followed by a parade of traditional sartorial clothing that was super fitted to the body with cropped blazers and tapered pants. Metallic bomber jackets with NASA logos set the tone for an array of intergalactic references that included alien faces printed on shirts and atomic symbols on the breast pockets of suit jackets.
In addition to the suits— which were offered in colorful, shiny solids and exaggerated men’s wear classic patterns — Graham introduced a lot more casualwear, including logo hoodies and sweat pants.
Although Graham’s obsession with space travel is nothing new, it continues to provide a fun story line and an uplifting

Nick Graham is bringing his distinct fashion sensibility to men’s socks.
The designer has teamed with McGregor Industries Inc., the Toronto-based hosiery company known in the U.S. and internationally as American Essentials Inc., to create the Nick Graham hosiery collection. The line will be in stores for fall.
“I’m excited about the opportunity to expand into hosiery, and as we simultaneously roll out our underwear collection, we can get dominant placement in the men’s furnishings departments and e-com in the U.S. and Canadian markets,” Graham said. “And given McGregor/American Essentials’ global reach, this will also open new markets for us. I couldn’t be happier to partner with such an amazing team that totally gets my brand and has such a dominant position in the market.”
Graham, founder of Joe Boxer, established his eponymous men’s wear brand in 2014 and launched underwear and loungewear for holiday. In August, Tharanco Group Inc. acquired the majority stake formerly held by Iconix Brand Group. The new owners said they will partner with NGL, Graham’s sales and marketing company, to distribute the brand’s collection of men’s dress shirts and furnishings, expand into other categories and bring the label to overseas markets this year. The line also includes tailored clothing, outerwear and

Just over three months ago, the former Bachelor star confirmed his split from Vanessa Grimaldi — whom he met, fell in love with and got engaged to on his season 21 of The Bachelor — in a joint statement to PEOPLE, in which the pair explained, “We gave this relationship our all and we are saddened that we did not get the fairytale ending we hoped for.”

Despite their ended engagement, Viall, 37, is on amicable terms with his ex-fiancée.

“It was unfortunate, but we wish each other the best. I certainly wish her the best,” Viall told Access Hollywood‘s Natalie Morales and Kit Hoover on Tuesday.

Asked if the former couple stays in touch since they parted ways, Viall admitted it’s “not on a regular basis.”

“Obviously we’re there for each other if need be, but she has her things going on and I have mine,” he shared. “I think we’re both thankful that we still have very positive thoughts and feelings for each other.”

Though Viall unfortunately didn’t meet his match during his turns on The Bachelorette, The Bachelor or Bachelor in Paradise, does the Wisconsin native still believe in love and trust that he’ll “find that person”?

“I hope so,” he told Hoover and Morales, and quipped, “It might have given up on me, I don’t know.”

“But yes, I hope one day that it works out for me,” he said. “You know, I’m out there dating.”

Come Jan. 1, Viall will officially hand over the reins of Bachelor to the franchise’s newest leading man, Arie Luyendyk Jr., whom Viall revealed he has “yet to meet.”

“The timing is just so perfect in my life,” Luyendyk Jr., who was runner-up on Emily Maynard‘s season of The Bachelorette in 2012, told PEOPLE of being named Bachelor. “I could not be more excited for this journey I’m about to embark on.”

Season 22 of The Bachelor premieres Monday, Jan. 1 at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.

Five Four can now add Nick Wooster to its growing list of collaborators.
The men’s retail company has worked with Chris Paul, Robert Geller, Mark McNairy and Motofumi “Poggy” Kogi, and now has teamed with Wooster to create a capsule collection that’s available exclusively on Five Four’s e-commerce site and subscription service.
The collection was inspired by time Wooster spent in Los Angeles. He’s designed reversible jackets with reflective fabric, leopard print sweaters, plaid bomber jackets and frayed jeans.
“We’ve taken really key, basic items that I think are essential to every man’s wardrobe, like striped oxford cloth shirts for instance, and given them a slight twist,” Wooster said. “The hope is that when a guy puts this on, he stops and thinks, ‘Hey, someone really thought about this for me.’”
Andres Izquieta, co-chief executive officer and creative director of Five Four, said he’s been following Wooster for years and thought the Five Four customer would appreciate his aesthetic.
“To say we’re excited to have him develop an entire collection for our Club subscription guys in addition to an e-commerce collaboration would be an understatement,” Izquieta said. “He has a very clear vision for how to create a truly diverse wardrobe that’s based off of very

“I think it’s funny that a lot of the girls from Nick’s season claim to know Nick and his relationship with Vanessa. Emily and I were both fortunate enough to become very close to both Nick and Vanessa,” the Ferguson sisters say in a joint statement. “We hung out with them not only together but also separately.”

“They both loved each other very much and tried very hard to make their relationship work. Like any normal relationship outside of the spotlight, they had their ups and downs. We love them both very much and hope that everyone will respect their privacy during this hard time,” the statement continues.

Viall, 36, and Grimaldi have battled split rumors since their awkward appearance on After the Final Rose, where they insisted there were no wedding plans in the works.

“It’s with a great amount of heartbreak for the both us as we have decided to end our engagement,” the couple, last pictured together on Instagram Aug. 15, said in a statement obtained by PEOPLE on Friday. “We gave this relationship our all and we are saddened that we did not get the fairytale ending we hoped for. We will continue to be there for each other no matter what. This hasn’t been an easy decision, however, as we part ways, we do so with lots of love and admiration for each other.”

Nick Graham is back in the underwear business.
The designer, who made his mark as founder and chief underpants officer of Joe Boxer, is launching a collection of underwear and loungewear under his eponymous brand for holiday.
“Even though it’s a very competitive classification, I still see a big opportunity to bring color, innovation and irony to the category.” Graham said.
The Nick Graham underwear collection will include conversational prints as well as core and fashion basics in microfibers, cotton spandex and combed cotton in vibrant colors. “We want to put the fun back into functionality,” Graham said.
The all-cotton loungewear will be offered in both wovens and knits and is designed to be worn both in and out of the house. Graham said he views this classification as one of the biggest opportunities since it blurs the lines between sleepwear and ath-leisure.

Loungewear is viewed as a big opportunity for the brand.

John Kammeier, president of NGL, the company that produces the collection, said, “Nick’s sensibility in these categories is somewhat legendary and I see a huge opportunity in the market for us. The reaction so far has been nothing but remarkable, and proves to us that there is still a void not being

Nick Graham has a new partner.
Tharanco Group Inc. has acquired the majority stake formerly held by Iconix Brand Group in NGX LLC, the company that owns the Nick Graham trademarks, WWD has learned. Tharanco will also partner with Graham’s sales and marketing company, NGL, to distribute the brand’s collection of men’s dress shirts and furnishings.
“This deal will bring significant resources to allow the brand to grow even faster. The team at Tharanco is committed to make this brand reach the scale I know we can get to…” Graham said.
It also brings together two of the best-known names in the men’s wear industry: Graham and Tharanco chief executive officer Michael Setola, a veteran of Salant Corp. and Oxford Industries who joined Tharanco nine years ago.
“Nick is a rare talent in the industry,” said Setola. “What he has and his team have created in three years is nothing short of remarkable. I know we can take this even further, and we look forward to helping him build the global brand that he envisions.”
He said the designer has “a unique perspective on the consumer and the brand is well-positioned from a value perspective, it’s not too top-end or low-end.”
Since starting his brand three

THROUGH THE LENS: Photographer Nick Knight — or image-maker, as he prefers to define himself — has never been one to shy away from a challenge.
Since the beginning of his decades-long career, Knight has had a number of collaborations, from Yohji Yamamoto to Lady Gaga, and all of them proved to be “a way to get a sense of somebody’s head, to get inside a person’s mind. Collaboration is the joy in being able to see the light in someone else’s eyes.”
Yamamoto was his first important collaboration; Knight was 26 at the time and “completely endorsed his way of life.” The Showstudio founder recalled that time during a talk hosted last night by Sarabande, the London-based foundation named after Alexander McQueen’s 2007 spring collection which provides scholarships to students as well as housing artist studios at its headquarters for designers, artists and jewelers. Former Sarabande’s scholars include designers such as Molly Goddard and Liam Johnson.
For his first Patron event at Sarabande, Knight was in conversation with writer and creative consultant Mimma Viglezio, where he dished on his years of collaborating across the creative industries, how to discover new talents and Kim Kardashian’s highest merit.
“Gianni Versace asked me to work with him and I said no,” said Knight

John Kammeier, a 30-year men’s wear veteran, has been promoted to president of NGL, the licensed division of dress shirts, neckwear and furnishings for Nick Graham. Kammeier joined the company in January 2016 as executive vice president of sales and merchandising.
He succeeds Chuck Hellman, who is leaving the company to pursue a personal retail venture. Hellman will remain an adviser to the brand.
“Over the last 18 months, John has made a significant contribution to the brand’s growth and has dramatically expanded our distribution,” Graham said, “He’s one of the best merchandisers in the men’s wear industry and has taken the product and brand to another level.”
Kammeier began his career in retail, holding buying positions at Woodward & Lothrop, Neiman Marcus and Britches of Georgetown. From 2004 to 2015, he was at Randa, where he held various merchandising positions working with brand including Ryan Seacrest, Michael Strahan, Ben Sherman and others. His most recent position at Randa was president of neckwear and jewelry.
“I’ve known Nick a long time and love his vision for his new brand,” Kammeier said. “Giving men contemporary solutions at an affordable price is a huge opportunity and I’m honored to accept a bigger role in the development of

But, making their special extra special, comedians Nick Kroll and John Mulaney are bringing a different kind of routine to the streaming service this summer. That’s right, “Oh, Hello,” their sold-out Broadway play based on “Kroll Show” characters Gil Faizon and George St. Geegland, is headed for a screen near you.

If you’re unfamiliar with Gil and George’s schtick, just imagine the elderly muppets Statler and Waldorf come to life with a mission to prank (or, “prahnk”) people into eating enormous tuna sandwiches. They do so while hosting a public-access show, wearing a lot of turtlenecks and suffering from bagel-induced cholesterol.

If you’re versed in the improv-heavy antics of the “Oh, Hello” men, then you’re probably aware of how difficult it was to get your hands on a ticket to their comedy act on Broadway, which closed earlier this year after more than 100 performances. Kroll and Mulaney (who has a Netflix comedy special of his own) have actually been honing the characters since the early 2000s, long before the “Kroll Show” premiered on Comedy Central. But the duo has become particularly popular in recent years, as the comedians took their act to late-night show couches.

On Broadway, Kroll and Mulaney welcomed a slew of famous guests to their stage, including Will Ferrell, Tina Fey, Whoopi Goldberg, Jerry Seinfeld and Amy Schumer. According to Playbill, the performances streaming on Netflix on June 13 will likely include footage from two taped performances that occurred on Jan. 19 and 20. If you know who the guests were, let us know!

The twin daughter and son of Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon celebrated their birthday on Sunday, with his and hers individual cakes and sweet messages from both their parents on social media.

“I can’t believe it’s been six years since you two came into this world to the live version of Fantasy.. ‘the applause!!!’ ” Carey captioned a 2011 photo of herself holding “Dem Babies” when they were just newborns.

“I love you both more each day,” added the proud mother of two. “You are the light of my life ❤❤ #Supernatural #HappyBirthday #RocnRoe.”

Cannon — also a new dad to son Golden, 9 weeks — used Instagram to send the twins well wishes too, posting a current photo of Roc and Roe in front of elaborate matching Mickey and Minnie Mouse cakes at Disneyland.

The father of three also shared a second snap of the now-6-year-olds when they were tiny tots, outfitted in matching “DEM BABIES” onesies and Air Jordan beanies.

“Seems like I just took this picture the other day!! Somebody stop the time from flying by … ” he captioned the throwback post.

Nick Graham has expanded his relationship with Bill Nye and is dressing the scientist and educator for his new Netflix series, “Bill Nye Saves the World.”
The 13-episode show started on Friday.
“Bill is one of those rare personalities that combines a strong compassionate message with his slightly irreverent, but always brilliant observations of the world,” Graham said. “Besides that, he has always had an enormous sense of style that he has made his own, and so all I had to do was take a bit further.”
Nye said: “Nick is incredibly creative and it’s reflected in his clothes. I love wearing his suits. And besides, they fit me right off the rack.”
On each episode of the Netflix show, Nye will take on a specific science-related topic or concept with panel discussions and correspondent reports. The set, which is designed as a modern science lab, is an extension of his popular series in the Nineties, “Bill Nye the Science Guy.”
Nye also walked in Nick Graham’s fall men’s show, titled “Life on Mars,” in January, which garnered over 1 billion impressions and 385,000 likes for Nye on Instagram, according to Graham.
The designer collaborated with Nye on a limited-edition collection of quirky, science-themed bow ties in November of 2015,

Nick Kroll and John Mulaney, this year’s Independent Spirit Awards co-hosts, didn’t hold back during Saturday’s ceremony in Los Angeles.

The creative minds behind “The Oh, Hello Show” ripped on politicians and Hollywood stars during the film awards.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, Kroll said of White House chief strategist Steven Bannon, “The only reason he got that job is because he’s so hot!” Mulaney added, “Those chapped kneecaps!” before Kroll weighed in, “In this country, if you’re that sexy, you can get anything you want. Steve Bannon is so hot. He looks like Nick Offerman drowned.”

President Donald Trump also wasn’t immune to criticism. Kroll called out Trump’s decision to remove bathroom protections for transgender students, sarcastically noting that “transgender children in public schools have had it too good for too long.” Mulaney chimed in, “Hey, Trump, you and Robert Durst are both rich sociopaths from New York, but somehow Robert Durst is more likable.”

Per THR, the hosts also took aim at Mel Gibson, director of the Oscar-nominated “Hacksaw Ridge.”

“We like to think of these awards as the ones without Mel Gibson,” Kroll said of awards show, which honors indie films. “People wondered: How long would it take Hollywood to forgive someone for anti-Semitic, racist hate speech?”

MOTHER AND SON: A new portrait of Queen Elizabeth has been released, shot by British photographer and Showstudio founder Nick Knight.
In the portrait, which has been released to mark the end of the Queen’s 90th birthday year, the monarch is sitting down wearing a light blue jacquard dress and pearl necklace. She is looking straight at the camera, while her son, Prince Charles, stands beside her, looking at her.

“I wanted to create a modern portrait that showed warmth and humanity as well as strength and tradition,” said Knight of the portrait. It was shot in May in the White Drawing Room of Windsor Castle, before the final night of celebrations at the Royal Windsor Horse Show.
Knight has previously collaborated closely with designers including Alexander McQueen, Christian Dior, John Galliano and Stephen Jones. His web site Showstudio.com, founded in 2000, has pioneered fashion film since its earliest days.
The Queen celebrated her 90th birthday by hosting a series of events throughout the year, including a ticketed picnic held in June, a parade and a party at Windsor Castle.
Three exhibitions were also staged in the Queen’s main residences: The Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh, Buckingham Palace in London and Windsor Castle in Windsor.

Nick Gordon has been found liable in the wrongful death case of his former girlfriend, Bobbi Kristina Brown. As part of the settlement, a judge has ordered him to pay $ 36 million to Brown’s estate.

According to a video obtained by TMZ, Brown’s father, former New Edition boy bander Bobby Brown, told the court that she had planned to go into entertainment—following in not only his footsteps, but those of her mother, Whitney Houston. Due to her talent and famous parentage, Brown believed his daughter to have extremely high show-business prospects.

“She was an entertainer. If you were around her, all you would do was laugh. She told a lot of jokes. She was always the life of the party…and anywhere she went,” Brown said Thursday on the stand. “I know she had the talent to be successful.”

He went on to state his belief that Gordon was responsible for Bobbi Kristina’s death.

—$ 13 million for pain and suffering, with an additional $ 4,200,000 because Gordon was found to be under the influence of alcohol and drugs

—$ 15,056,000 million for loss of life, factoring in future earning potential

Gordon has yet to comment on the rulling, but one of his reletives tells PEOPLE that he’s understandably distraught. “Nick isn’t in a good place right now. He doesn’t have any money. This is symbolic more than anything, because they’re not going to get anything from him. You can’t get blood from a stone.”

They go on to say that he will likely file for bankruptcy. “That will probably be his next step, but I don’t think he’s thinking straight right now. He is still in morning for Krissi. This isn’t going to bring her back, no matter what they think. They need to look into themselves to see what part everybody played in this, not just Nick. Everybody needs a lot of prayer.”

Overview Nick and Tesla are bright 11-year-old siblings with a knack for science, electronics, and getting into trouble. When their parents mysteriously vanish, they’re sent to live with their Uncle Newt, a brilliant inventor who engineers top-secret gadgets for a classified government agency. It’s not long before Nick and Tesla are embarking on adventures of their own?engineering all kinds of outrageous MacGyverish contraptions to save their skin: 9-volt burglar alarms, electromagnets, mobile tracking devices, and more. Readers are invited to join in the fun as each story contains instructions and blueprints for five different projects. In Nick and Tesla’s High-Voltage Danger Lab, we meet the characters and learn how to make everything from rocket launchers to soda-powered vehicles. Learning about science has never been so dangerous?or so much fun! Product details Isbn-13: 9781594746482, 978-1594746482 Author: Science Bob Pflugfelder Publisher: Quirk Books Publication date: 2013-11-18 About Wordery Wordery is one of the UK’s largest online booksellers. With millions of satisfied customers who enjoy low prices on a huge range of books, we offer a reliable and trusted service and consistently receive excellent feedback. We offer a huge range of over 8 million books; bestsellers, children’s books, cheap paperbacks, baby books, special edition hardbacks and textbooks. All our books are dispatched from the UK. Wordery offers Free Delivery on all UK orders, and competitively priced international delivery. #HappyReading

ATLANTA (AP) — A court-appointed representative of Bobbi Kristina Brown has filed a lawsuit against her boyfriend, Nick Gordon, claiming he took money from her and abused her physically and emotionally.

Bedilia Hargrove filed a lawsuit against Gordon Wednesday in Fulton County Superior Court. The complaint says Gordon routinely transferred large amounts of money from Brown’s accounts to his without Brown’s permission.

The complaint also accused Gordon of misrepresenting the nature of his relationship with Brown, being violent toward her and arguing with her before she was found face down in a bathtub at her suburban Atlanta townhome.

They were the soft moans and groans heard round the world: After saying goodbye to Deerfield Academy's finest, Bachelorette Kaitlyn Bristowe enjoyed an "adult sleepover" with the already-controversial contestant Nick Viall. While the other guys…

A young, narcissistic entrepreneur crashes and burns on the eve of his company’s big launch. With his entire life in total disarray, he leaves Manhattan to move in with his estranged pregnant sister, brother-in-law and 3-year-old nephew in the suburbs – only to become their nanny.Uploads by Film Festivals and Indie Films

After spending two decades in England, Bill Bryson returns to the U.S., where he decides the best way to connect with his homeland is to hike the Appalachian Trail with one of his oldest friends.Uploads by Film Festivals and Indie Films

Nick Payne’s Constellations arrives at the Manhattan Theatre Club’s Samuel J. Friedman after winning the 2012 Evening Standard Theatre Award for Best Play and receiving a clutch of rave reviews that encouraged the move from its initial production at London’s Royal Court to the West End.

Depending on whether or not you’ve seen the theatrical device Payne uses throughout the 80-minute intermissionless work, you’re likely to respond to it anywhere between greatly awed and slightly less impressed. No matter where you land on that narrow spectrum, you’ll be wowed by Michael Longhurst’s director of Jake Gyllenhaal and Ruth Wilson and Tom Scutt’s set, which consists only of a raised platform above which hang many balloon-shaped spheres with curlicue ribbons that change colors as Lee Curran’s lights hit them.

The device on which your reaction depends is Payne’s introducing scenes–he refers to them as “universes”–that play through and then, when the lights and David McSeveney’s sound signal, begin again but in variation.

Before the hour and 20 minutes have elapsed, the characters Roland (Gyllenhaal) and Marianne (Wilson) have played 60 or so sequences that suggest infinite variations on a Roland-Marianne relationship that extends from their first meeting at a rainy barbecue through their falling in love, becoming estranged, reuniting until she does or doesn’t (spoiler alert! Proceed with caution) succumb to a fatal brain tumor.

If the Q&A session that followed the preview I attended is any indication, most ticket buyers won’t previously have seen anything like the Payne ploy. For them, the proceedings are likely to be totally startling. Forgive me, however, for saying that I’ve seen the conceit. One example is “Sure Thing,” one of the six one-acts in David Ives’s All in the Timing. Therefore, I remained less whelmed.

Nevertheless, I was whelmed sufficiently by the use to which Payne puts his device. He hints strongly at it with his title, of course. The scenes’ variations can be taken in as constellations, can they not, as possibly infinite combinations?

More than that, he nudges audiences along by way of the Roland-Marianne careers. He’s a beekeeper, who more than once talks about how the three types of bee–queen, drone and worker–live brief, predestined lives. She’s a physicist, who expounds on relativity and quantum mechanics. At one point, she declares, “[One] way of explaining this is to draw the conclusion that, at any given moment, several outcomes can exist simultaneously. (Yoo-hoo, Ives’s All in the Timing.)

The fun Payne has illustrating this spin on things like Stephen Hawkings’s theory of everything can be–and is–transmitted to the audience, but it’s up to Gyllenhaal and Wilson to play it. (In London the cast was Rafe Spall and Sally Hawkins.)

Taking into account what seems a great challenge to keep all the scenes pristine–many, if not most, of them only slightly changed from the preceding scene or scenes–they emerge triumphant. Perhaps one of the helpful clues to them are the positions Longhurst has them take for each segment. Call it muscle memory. (Lucy Cullingford is credited as movement director.)

Wilson, whom I saw as Stella in the relatively recent Donmar Warehouse Streetcar Named Desire as well as I watched wide-eyed her devastating stalker on television’s Luther (but haven’t seen her on The Affair), is a consummate actress called on here to express any number of emotions as the possible stories shift. She has Marianne’s intelligence down as it’s combined with the woman’s anger and eventual fear for her health.

From start to finish Wilson couldn’t have been more natural in Scutt’s abstract environment, and Gyllenhaal matches her scene for scene. His Roland is clearly likable, if not an IQ match for Marianne. His passion for her is equal to hers eventually for him. He’s all good-guy affability, straightforward intentions. (His performance becomes all the more impressive when contrasted with his currently Oscar-touted turn on screen in Nightcrawler.)

Another Gyllenhaal achievement is his mastery of a very specific English accent. I’ve heard many Americans saddled with British intonations (most recently in the revival of The Real Thing), and I’m obliged to say Gyllenhaal’s is the best I’ve heard from a stateside actor–ever.

Curiously, no dialect coach is mentioned in the program, but I wonder if Gyllenhaal sought the assistance of the same person who worked with sister Maggie on her also excellent (and different) accent for the series The Honorable Woman. Or do both Gyllenhaal’s simply have amazing ears for accents?

It’s always a pleasure to see a drama that starts you thinking about scientific issues all the while remaining deeply human. Constellations is just that kind of delight.Arts – The Huffington Post
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“We have an especially good relationship and we really get a kick out of each other,” she said. “I really like him. I like being around him, I like talking to him, I like looking at him. I think he’s funny, I think he’s cute, he’s really nice. And I think he thinks all those things about me.”

Although Mullally says that her relationship with Offerman has taken on “mythic proportions” among their fans and in the media, it turns out, it really is pretty damn great.

“I think sometimes we can see other couples and we’ll get in the car afterward and be like, ‘I don’t think they like each other that much.'” She continued, “We have a little bit of superiority complex at times. We don’t mean to.”

The actress also said that she and Offerman have been joking recently that if they ever got into a fight in public, the world would probably come crashing down.

“It’s going to be the headline of The New York Times because people have idealized our relationship to the point where it’s like — yeah, occasionally we argue. We’re just like any other couple in that regard. But we don’t argue that much. I think we really like each other, is the thing.”

Sometimes meeting your idol isn’t as amazing as you’d hope it would be. Nick Kroll stopped by “The Tonight Show” on Friday and told Jimmy Fallon the story of his cringeworthy encounter with the legendary Bill Murray.

Kroll said that one night when he was set to perform at an open mic event, he got word that Bill Murray was in the building. Kroll, being a huge fan of the “Caddyshack” actor, approached Murray and asked him if he would watch his stand-up routine. When Murray agreed, Kroll couldn’t be more excited … until, that is, he totally bombed on stage, with Murray watching.

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Today, the 98 Degrees lead singer turns the big 4-0. Vanessa Minnillo’s beau has much to celebrate: the Package Tour (with his group, Boyz II Men and New Kids On The Block) was a huge summer success, his wife shares the same birthday as him and their son Camden turned one in September!

Lachey has come a long way since his ’90s boy band beginnings. Need proof? We dug up some of his most awkward moments in pop history to toast his milestone. Cheers, Nick!